Thursday, 3 April 2003

This presentation is part of : Clinical neurosciences in aging and dementia: from research to practice

Immunity and Neurons: Human Immunoglobulins Induce Conformational Changes of Neuronal Microtubules

Beat Riederer, Institut de Biologie Cellulaire et de Morphologie, Institut de Biologie Cellulaire et de Morphologie, Université de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland

The influence of human immunoglobulins (Ig) in neuronal cytoskeleton stability was studied in vitro. Here we show that human Ig and Fc fragments stimulate animal and human microtubule assembly by binding to microtubules via tau isoforms. In presence of Ig microtubules show increased aggregation, twisting and rigidity. Non-immune Ig and Fc fragments promote microtubule assembly in temperature-dependent manner and stabilize microtubules at a molecular ratio of 1 Ig per at least 4 tubulin dimers. These in vitro data provide an experimental support for an immuno-mediated modulation of the cytoskeleton. In conjunction with previous neuropathological data, they suggest that Ig could participate in early stages of neurodegeneration by affecting the microtubule stability in vivo.

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